05-05-2012, 04:56 PM
VEDIC MATHEMATICS -‘VEDIC’ OR ‘MATHEMATICS’:A FUZZY and NEUTROSOPHIC ANALYSIS
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INTRODUCTION TO
VEDIC MATHEMATICS
In this chapter we just recall some notions given in the book on
Vedic Mathematics written by Jagadguru Swami Sri Bharati
Krsna Tirthaji Maharaja (Sankaracharya of Govardhana Matha,
Puri, Orissa, India), General Editor, Dr. V.S. Agrawala. Before
we proceed to discuss the Vedic Mathematics that he professed
we give a brief sketch of his heritage [51].
He was born in March 1884 to highly learned and pious
parents. His father Sri P Narasimha Shastri was in service as a
Tahsildar at Tinnivelly (Madras Presidency) and later retired as
a Deputy Collector. His uncle, Sri Chandrasekhar Shastri was
the principal of the Maharajas College, Vizianagaram and his
great grandfather was Justice C. Ranganath Shastri of the
Madras High Court. Born Venkatraman he grew up to be a
brilliant student and invariably won the first place in all the
subjects in all classes throughout his educational career. During
his school days, he was a student of National College
Trichanapalli; Church Missionary Society College, Tinnivelli
and Hindu College Tinnivelly in Tamil Nadu.
Second Method
The second method is the method of division (instead of
multiplication) by the self-same “Ekādhikena Pūrvena” namely
2. And as division is the exact opposite of multiplication it
stands to reason that the operation of division should proceed
not from right to left (as in the case of multiplication as
expounded here in before) but in the exactly opposite direction;
i.e. from left to right. And such is actually found to be the case.
Its application and modus operandi are as follows:
The First Corollary
The first corollary naturally arising out of the Nikhilam Sutra
reads in English “whatever the extent of its deficiency lessen it
still further to that very extent, and also set up the square of that
deficiency”.